Yes, Lego has completely sold out. Actually, that's not true. That implies that that there was a time that they hadn't sold out. It's a for-profit company. They are in it to make money. Nothing wrong with that, but that is what they are, first and foremost.
They will do what they need to do to survive. In their opinion, they cannot sustain their business by using the value proposition of 40 years ago. As much as I admired that value proposition, I personally agree with them. They could not survive turning out the basic building blocks, or even more advanced building kits, or even robotics kits. They wouldn't have the market share, or the advertising appeal, or the patent protection. They are fighting for their existence every day. They've got constant competition for kids' time and for M&D's dollars from endless and ever-increasing sources, and competitors willing to race them to the bottom every step of the way.
There was a time that Lego said, "we'll never make Lego guns". That is long gone. There are Lego guns, ray guns, knives, swords, scimitars. Heck, space ships with laser cannon. They've made endless marketing deals with entertainment conglomerates in order to stay relevant. They have not yet found their bottom. They have not yet found where they will not go to stay in business.
To me, as much as I still love the company, and the product, they've lost their soul, and they are walking dead guys, however successful they are currently. The color palette is out of control. The types of pieces have grown to be absurd. Although there is still play value, it becomes harder and harder for any pile of n Legos to have general playability. If you have a Luke Skywalker, and a wookie, then that is your story palette. It becomes that much more challenging to make a house. If you have the batmobile, it becomes difficult to make a regular car.
One could hope they'll split the company, and spin off a company focused only on the basics for ages 0 through 10, without marketing tie-ins, and another company focused just on robotics, and let the main company battle it out in pop culture land. But it will never happen.
Perhaps the 3D printer world will take over the basics niche. I could see a not-for-profit doing very well making it easy for people to print their own sets for their 1 year olds or 5 year olds.
Is there any reason for the government to run the post office.? (Yes. The constitution provides for it.)
Why are you so invested in having the government run the post office? What makes you think that big top-down government agencies are the way to go?
If the USPS is self-sufficient why MUST it be a government service? Do you actually think that government agencies are better?
Here's your answer:
The mission of the Postal Service is to provide the American public with trusted universal postal service at affordable prices. While not explicitly defined, the Postal Service's universal service obligation (USO) is broadly outlined in statute and includes multiple dimensions: geographic scope, range of products, access to services and facilities, delivery frequency, affordable and uniform pricing, service quality, and security of the mail. While other carriers may claim to voluntarily provide delivery on a broad basis, the Postal Service is the only carrier with a legal obligation to provide all the various aspects of universal service at affordable rates.
So, if we don't think we need a post office, let's change the constitution.
Personally, I think there some services best provided by the government, including services where it might be desirable to provide a certain level of service at a certain price to everyone in the country. Maybe you disagree. That is your right. So change it. Get your congresscritters to amend the Constitution.
Again, just my opinion, but to some extent our national character is defined by the obligations that unite us. The interstate system, CDC, USPS, NASA, the US military, Sesame Street. Things that exist only in America. Get rid of enough of those obligations, and we're no longer the United States, we're just some states.
Or maybe, just maybe, the actual learning happens in the student's head. If the student is motivated, and has the materials available, nothing can stop them.
On the other hand, the university setting provides the marginally motivated the necessary framework to execute the prescribed tasks to earn the credits to earn the degree.
So let's be careful to not confuse getting a degree with getting an education.
However, Charles Darwin got 4000 votes in the recent election, hence the post. The incumbent, who won, is Paul Broun:
Here's an interesting excerpt from Wikipedia:
In a leaked video of a speech given at Liberty Baptist Church Sportsman's Banquet on September 27, Broun is heard telling supporters that, “All that stuff I was taught about evolution and embryology and the Big Bang Theory, all that is lies straight from the pit of Hell.” Broun also believes that the world is less than 9000 years old and that it was created in six literal days. In response to this, and as Broun is also on the House Science Committee, libertarian radio talk show host Neil Boortz spear-headed a campaign to run the English naturalist and evolutionary theorist Charles Darwin (1809-1882) against Broun, with the intention of drawing attention to these comments from the scientific community and having Broun removed from his post on the House Science Committee.
It's "For all intents and purposes", not "For all intensive purposes". Just saying. I mean, you can say whatever you want, I guess, but that's the expression. Sorry for being pedantic. Carry on.
I mean, we just had a guy on a congressional science committee forcefully and publicly proclaim that women emit some kind of magical substance to prevent pregnancy when "legitimately" raped.
I think the guy is a buffoon, personally. But is he wrong? If you reject his claim as categorically impossible on the face of it then you are making the same mistake being discussed. What your opinion is doesn't matter. It's the facts. Just the facts, ma'am.
After that yo-yo made his pronouncement I immediately thought, jeez, what a maroon. There's another example of decide your opinion first, then make up facts to support it. But then I asked myself, what if he's right? After all, there's more to it than you might know, Horatio.
So I did some fact checking. There is some slight support that stress will interfere with fertilization. Beyond that, I couldn't find much to support his claim, that didn't appear to be politically motivated.
But what we want to be true means nothing. It is what *is* true that is important.
“What are the facts? Again and again and again – what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore divine revelation, forget what “the stars foretell,” avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable “verdict of history” – what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your single clue. Get the facts!”
Do we have a moral duty to bring back smallpox? And reintroduce it to its former habitat?
Morals, schmorals. Mother Nature has left the building. We have default control of the biosphere, whether we want it or not. I doubt we can agree on what is "moral". We can't even agree on what is effective.
The only obligation we have is to manage the planet. We took over, we're in control. We choose what happens to life on Planet Earth.
Morals is just your way of saying you think you know best and anyone who deviates from that is obviously a . . . deviant, so that's why your way is right.
If you (or your job) has been "made redundant", it means - quite literally - that they no longer have a use for you.
We call that "laid off" on this side of the pond. Quite different than just "laid", I assure you, and they're both different from "laid out", which might also involve lying down, but I always say, make love, not war. Lay offs are when a business needs to reduce its workforce. There are a lot of rules and regulations about how its done. The natural tendency is to get rid of the deadwood as cheaply as possible, but there are significant rules designed to keep things "fair". I've been on both sides of the lay off process, at least half a dozen times. One time we laid off my whole division, so I've even laid myself off.
. . . especially when I spend a LOT of my time looking up what the hell certain Americanisms mean because they're not at all obvious (John Doe? Really? You can't just say you don't know their names?)
Not to be confused with John Deer, John Handcock, Johnny-come-lately or Dear-John or just a plain John, which has several meanings, none of them particularly flattering, or even doughboy, although even you Brits ought to recognize that last one. And over here Johnny is just a friendly name for a guy named John, or sometimes any bloke.
The fifth amendment?
Not to be confused with the Fifth Amendments, although truthfully I've never quite understood the difference between Parliament and Funkadelic. And lots of people smoke Parliaments, although that's probably NOT what P-Funk was smoking.
49th/50th/51st/52nd street
Do you *really* want to go down that road? At least NYC was laid out (mostly) by people who actually SPOKE English, whereas London, for instance, was laid out by blokes who spoke SPOKE A DIFFERENT LANGUAGE ENTIRELY. And they burnt the town to the ground every few centuries and changed everything, but kept all the same road names. I mean, have to actually LOOKED at a map of London? I bet there are tourists who've been lost in there for YEARS.
And by the way, you've got your own share of odd terms. Over here a sleeping policeman is actually a sleeping policeman!
Don't get your knickers in a twist or throw a wobbly. I'm not trying to be cheeky or even twee. We could argue about 'maths', 'plasters', amongst' , 'paracetamol', 'petrol' or a bunch of other words in inverted commas, last of all, zed, for heaven sakes.
Let's forget all that and just stay mates. And by that I mean pals and not any sort of hanky-panky. Sure, we had our disagreements every now and then, and actually burning the White House was a bit beyond the pale, but we've got your backs and you've got ours. US and UK, BFF.
Of course they want to cooperate with other companies. Businesses cooperate with other businesses all the time. And assuming they have massive amounts of information on everything I do, their statements regarding their efforts to safeguard it and their blandishments regarding their obligations to my privacy is merely marketing.
Oh, like they care a fig for your profile. Through browser tracking and embedded scripts, they know your every click on the internet. Through GPS they know your every step. Through email, they know your every word. And sure, you can poison your profile. But you can't do anything about the vast, vast flood of data they have on you. And maybe, just maybe, you personally have the skill and energy to defeat them. But the vast majority of people have neither.
No doubt this comment is too late to get much attention, but I had to answer.
Imagine that a corporation can track and inspect your every email, phone conversation, instant message, and footstep. They correlate it. They know who your friends are, what books you read, everything. That's an incredible amount of information. Even if you assume that the information is only going to be used for relatively harmless purposes, such as advertising. And if you think that's far-fetched, Google is trying pretty hard to get that level of knowledge of you. As are many others. And much of it is behind the scenes. Turn on Ghostery and see how many web sites pop up Google scripts. Even if you don't use any Google product, they are tracking you.
Now, imagine that they collaborate with other companies. What if they could use that knowledge of your every thought to raise prices in real time for the things you need most? Gas when you're about to run out? Use your imagination. Fair dealing is based on the notion of reasonably symmetrical information. If they other side knows everything about you, and you know nothing about them, you're at a disadvantage.
Now, imagine that an organization knows everything about you. And let's say the government decided it needs some information. So now the government knows everything about you, too. Do you completely trust the government? Are you sure they'll never make a mistake?
Now, imagine that people come to power who do not share your enlightened views on humanity. They think that there's a problem with, oh, left-handed people, people who wear socks with sandals, redheads, people born in February, people not from around here, people with certain political leanings. And let's say they get their hands on the aggregated information about you. Maybe they won't lock you up. But maybe they will. Or maybe they won't lock you up today. If you behave.
Think about all of the organizations, both real and fictional, that want unlimited knowledge of the general public. Not one of them inspires confidence. Think Big Brother. Spanish Inquisition. Total Information Awareness.
In my mind, unlimited personal knowledge aggregation leads straight to political repression. It is, in fact, evil.
Phhft. And even pro photographers are struggling these days. There are legions of photographers everywhere with everything from fingernail cams to full-on bevawatt Mark XXII anvils who will take pictures of any damn thing and post it for free. Hard to make a living in that environment. Not that there isn't plenty of work for pro photographers. But for anyone thinking they're going to wander around with a camera and take a few snaps and make buckets of money, the competition from the hoards of amateurs working for fun is fierce.
Or . . . get an introductory DSLR and a great lens or two.
The Nikon D3000 DSLR with the 18-200mm zoom lens and the 35mm f/1.8 lens make a great starter set. In a few years you can upgrade the DSLR. By that time they'll have a consumer model that will take pictures in total darkness 24 hours ahead of time.
Carrying a DSLR is a decision. Once you decide you're going to carry a camera bag everywhere, it's easy. And it gives you extra room for stuff, like water bottles.
Having a camera on your phone is awesome. Carrying a DSLR is also awesome, and completely different.
They say the camera doesn't make the picture, the photographer does. That may be true, but the equipment helps.
You aren't going to get a picture like this on your phone, or with anything less than a 300mm equivalent lens. I'm not a great photographer. I think this is a pretty darn good picture. It was shot with a Nikon D90 and a 18-200 lens from quite a ways away. (I wish I knew how far. 40 yards? More? Less?) Don't know if you're going to get this from anything less than a DSLR. The DSLR doesn't matter so much. The lens does.
http://i.imgur.com/mO8da.jpg
And to parent: a tripod is great, but I almost never use them for panoramas. PhotoShop (even Elements) will stitch together just about any old thing into a great panorama. There's plenty of other panorama software, too.
Heck, two of the best passages in modern literature are the narrative of the Deliverator in the beginning of Snow Crash and the story of Lord Gy in Quicksilver.
Ha, yes. Newton, Liebnitz, William of Orange, all of that stuff. Learned it all from The Baroque Cycle. Nothing like fiction to teach you history! Oh, and we can't forget Lord Gy.
Turbo Pascal 4.0 was the best. Not because of efficiency, or programming paradigm, or any of that.
It had an integrated development environment that was a dream to use. The online documentation was helpful. The manual was a masterpiece. It was easy to begin with not very much and to be producing fairly complex results in not much time.
I am not a programmer by trade. Studied it in school, way back in the 20th century. Since then, every now and then I've done some programming for my own utility or for work projects in all sorts of languages, including programming, macro, and scripting languages.
Perl 5.2 was the closest I've come to a language I really like since Turbo Pascal. Yeah, the initial syntax learning curve was ferocious, but in the end it wasn't that steep. Sure, no integrated development environment, but a decent text editor was almost as good. The Perl manual pages were masterful. Again, easy to begin with not very much and produce useful results in not much time.
I'd really like to find my own personal 21st century Turbo Pascal. I don't care about the syntax, although I actually sort of liked the Pascal syntax. I want a tool that is easy to install, that includes a reasonable IDE with conveniences like syntax highlighting and code-completion, useful documentation, and a fairly rapid path from the start line to something useful. I'm willing to give up the IDE if I can get consise and precise syntax documentation and error messages.
I took a look at Perl 6. I haven't given up on it yet, but it doesn't seem cooked yet. And the documentation left me swimming in a sea of information that never seemed relevant to what i was trying to do.
I took a look at Clojure. I had a lot of hope for it. I ended up lost in a sea of irrelevancy trying to figure out how to do very basic things.
Ruby. Couldn't download it. Don't know why. Some website error over a couple of days. Fail. Maybe I'll try again some time.
Python. There is something that just seems wrong to me about indenting being syntactically significant. But what the heck, I'm willing to set that aside. The documentation isn't bad. My biggest issue with Python is "SyntaxError: bad syntax". That's it? Nearly a hundred years of computer science and the most the computer can tell me about my mistake is "SyntaxError: bad syntax"? I can't even get a "operator expected" message? Okay, so occasionally some sort of indentation error, but mostly just "bad syntax". I haven't completely given up on it, but I got tired of fighting that error message.
Actually, C# is the best I've found so far. I am really hoping for something better. But I've been able to start from not much and produce small but useful (console) programs in not much time at all. The combination of command-line compiler and my own text editor was enough to get me going. Basic language documentation is woefully deficient, but somehow that wasn't much of a problem. I've developed a love-hate relationship with Visual Studio, though. Can't seem to make it edit just one file, with full syntax and code-completion. It wants "projects" and "solutions". Screw that. I understand the usefulness of that, but if I'm writing a 30 line script that does something useful to some text data, I don't want to go through all the overhead of "projects" and "solutions", I want to create a file, edit, compile, and done. And the on-line help in VS is . . . stupid.
So, go ahead and jump on me. If any of these are your pet language, and I'm just not getting it, please enlighten me. If you have a different pet language, and I'm just not getting it, please enlighten me.
But whatever it is it needs to be pretty simple to install the basic environment. Basic documentation needs to be pretty useful. An IDE with syntax-highlighting and code-completion is a big bonus, but I can live without it if there's decent error messages and documentation. And it needs to be useful pretty
I was just jerking your chain. The idea that someone with "chicago" in their user name was advocating charging people not in big cities more was too irresistable to pass up. But you might be right. Maybe rurals *should* pay more for mail delivery. I'll have to think about that. Of course, I live in a big city, too. It's always easier to see the merits of one's own position when it coincidentally costs the *other* guy more.
What is new is a 2006 law requiring the USPS to bank their employees' retirement money 75 years in advance
it seems to wise to plan ahead like that
You're right.
The government should require all government agencies to plan ahead like that. What you say, Mr. Government Accountant? No government agency could begin to fund such a thing? Interesting.
No doubt the private sector has already integrated such wisdom into the economy, given that the invisible hand guarantees the greatest good for the greatest number. What you say, Mr. Private-sector Accountant? No company could begin to fund such a thing? Interesting.
No, my guy only ever kept passwords outside of the office in an encrypted file in a truecrypt partition on an air-gapped pos which also doubled as a digital picture frame as a cover story.
Don't think he ever sold any company stuff on ebay. I did see him rescue parts out of the dumpster and build systems out of them. I got my first real system that way. Of course, it's dual 40MB drives had to stand on their sides on the desk next to the system board until I bought a box for them. Ah, those were the days.
Simply saying that "There's nothing wrong with increasing profitability" as a blanket statement is hugely oversimplifying the situation.
Actually, I agree with you. I believe in as little government regulation as possible, and no less. Unbridled capitalism leads to government-sanctioned monopoly, slavery, and environmental destruction.
Yes, Lego has completely sold out. Actually, that's not true. That implies that that there was a time that they hadn't sold out. It's a for-profit company. They are in it to make money. Nothing wrong with that, but that is what they are, first and foremost.
They will do what they need to do to survive. In their opinion, they cannot sustain their business by using the value proposition of 40 years ago. As much as I admired that value proposition, I personally agree with them. They could not survive turning out the basic building blocks, or even more advanced building kits, or even robotics kits. They wouldn't have the market share, or the advertising appeal, or the patent protection. They are fighting for their existence every day. They've got constant competition for kids' time and for M&D's dollars from endless and ever-increasing sources, and competitors willing to race them to the bottom every step of the way.
There was a time that Lego said, "we'll never make Lego guns". That is long gone. There are Lego guns, ray guns, knives, swords, scimitars. Heck, space ships with laser cannon. They've made endless marketing deals with entertainment conglomerates in order to stay relevant. They have not yet found their bottom. They have not yet found where they will not go to stay in business.
To me, as much as I still love the company, and the product, they've lost their soul, and they are walking dead guys, however successful they are currently. The color palette is out of control. The types of pieces have grown to be absurd. Although there is still play value, it becomes harder and harder for any pile of n Legos to have general playability. If you have a Luke Skywalker, and a wookie, then that is your story palette. It becomes that much more challenging to make a house. If you have the batmobile, it becomes difficult to make a regular car.
One could hope they'll split the company, and spin off a company focused only on the basics for ages 0 through 10, without marketing tie-ins, and another company focused just on robotics, and let the main company battle it out in pop culture land. But it will never happen.
Perhaps the 3D printer world will take over the basics niche. I could see a not-for-profit doing very well making it easy for people to print their own sets for their 1 year olds or 5 year olds.
Just my 2 bricks.
There Are Only Three True Job Interview Questions
1. Can you do the job?
2. Will you love the job?
3. Can we tolerate working with you?
http://www.forbes.com/sites/georgebradt/2011/04/27/top-executive-recruiters-agree-there-are-only-three-key-job-interview-questions/
Is there any reason for the government to run the post office.? (Yes. The constitution provides for it.)
Why are you so invested in having the government run the post office? What makes you think that big top-down government agencies are the way to go?
If the USPS is self-sufficient why MUST it be a government service? Do you actually think that government agencies are better?
Here's your answer:
The mission of the Postal Service is to provide the American public with trusted universal postal service at affordable prices. While not explicitly defined, the Postal Service's universal service obligation (USO) is broadly outlined in statute and includes multiple dimensions: geographic scope, range of products, access to services and facilities, delivery frequency, affordable and uniform pricing, service quality, and security of the mail. While other carriers may claim to voluntarily provide delivery on a broad basis, the Postal Service is the only carrier with a legal obligation to provide all the various aspects of universal service at affordable rates.
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usps#Universal_service_obligation_and_monopoly_status.
So, if we don't think we need a post office, let's change the constitution.
Personally, I think there some services best provided by the government, including services where it might be desirable to provide a certain level of service at a certain price to everyone in the country. Maybe you disagree. That is your right. So change it. Get your congresscritters to amend the Constitution.
Again, just my opinion, but to some extent our national character is defined by the obligations that unite us. The interstate system, CDC, USPS, NASA, the US military, Sesame Street. Things that exist only in America. Get rid of enough of those obligations, and we're no longer the United States, we're just some states.
Or maybe, just maybe, the actual learning happens in the student's head. If the student is motivated, and has the materials available, nothing can stop them.
On the other hand, the university setting provides the marginally motivated the necessary framework to execute the prescribed tasks to earn the credits to earn the degree.
So let's be careful to not confuse getting a degree with getting an education.
However, Charles Darwin got 4000 votes in the recent election, hence the post. The incumbent, who won, is Paul Broun:
Here's an interesting excerpt from Wikipedia:
In a leaked video of a speech given at Liberty Baptist Church Sportsman's Banquet on September 27, Broun is heard telling supporters that, “All that stuff I was taught about evolution and embryology and the Big Bang Theory, all that is lies straight from the pit of Hell.” Broun also believes that the world is less than 9000 years old and that it was created in six literal days. In response to this, and as Broun is also on the House Science Committee, libertarian radio talk show host Neil Boortz spear-headed a campaign to run the English naturalist and evolutionary theorist Charles Darwin (1809-1882) against Broun, with the intention of drawing attention to these comments from the scientific community and having Broun removed from his post on the House Science Committee.
Your sig . . . .
It's "For all intents and purposes", not "For all intensive purposes". Just saying. I mean, you can say whatever you want, I guess, but that's the expression. Sorry for being pedantic. Carry on.
I mean, we just had a guy on a congressional science committee forcefully and publicly proclaim that women emit some kind of magical substance to prevent pregnancy when "legitimately" raped.
I think the guy is a buffoon, personally. But is he wrong? If you reject his claim as categorically impossible on the face of it then you are making the same mistake being discussed. What your opinion is doesn't matter. It's the facts. Just the facts, ma'am.
After that yo-yo made his pronouncement I immediately thought, jeez, what a maroon. There's another example of decide your opinion first, then make up facts to support it. But then I asked myself, what if he's right? After all, there's more to it than you might know, Horatio.
So I did some fact checking. There is some slight support that stress will interfere with fertilization. Beyond that, I couldn't find much to support his claim, that didn't appear to be politically motivated.
But what we want to be true means nothing. It is what *is* true that is important.
“What are the facts? Again and again and again – what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore divine revelation, forget what “the stars foretell,” avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable “verdict of history” – what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your single clue. Get the facts!”
Phfft
Do we have a moral duty to bring back smallpox? And reintroduce it to its former habitat?
Morals, schmorals. Mother Nature has left the building. We have default control of the biosphere, whether we want it or not. I doubt we can agree on what is "moral". We can't even agree on what is effective.
The only obligation we have is to manage the planet. We took over, we're in control. We choose what happens to life on Planet Earth.
Morals is just your way of saying you think you know best and anyone who deviates from that is obviously a . . . deviant, so that's why your way is right.
Not only that, look at the terms themselves.
If you (or your job) has been "made redundant", it means - quite literally - that they no longer have a use for you.
We call that "laid off" on this side of the pond. Quite different than just "laid", I assure you, and they're both different from "laid out", which might also involve lying down, but I always say, make love, not war. Lay offs are when a business needs to reduce its workforce. There are a lot of rules and regulations about how its done. The natural tendency is to get rid of the deadwood as cheaply as possible, but there are significant rules designed to keep things "fair". I've been on both sides of the lay off process, at least half a dozen times. One time we laid off my whole division, so I've even laid myself off.
. . . especially when I spend a LOT of my time looking up what the hell certain Americanisms mean because they're not at all obvious (John Doe? Really? You can't just say you don't know their names?)
Not to be confused with John Deer, John Handcock, Johnny-come-lately or Dear-John or just a plain John, which has several meanings, none of them particularly flattering, or even doughboy, although even you Brits ought to recognize that last one. And over here Johnny is just a friendly name for a guy named John, or sometimes any bloke.
The fifth amendment?
Not to be confused with the Fifth Amendments, although truthfully I've never quite understood the difference between Parliament and Funkadelic. And lots of people smoke Parliaments, although that's probably NOT what P-Funk was smoking.
49th/50th/51st/52nd street
Do you *really* want to go down that road? At least NYC was laid out (mostly) by people who actually SPOKE English, whereas London, for instance, was laid out by blokes who spoke SPOKE A DIFFERENT LANGUAGE ENTIRELY. And they burnt the town to the ground every few centuries and changed everything, but kept all the same road names. I mean, have to actually LOOKED at a map of London? I bet there are tourists who've been lost in there for YEARS.
And by the way, you've got your own share of odd terms. Over here a sleeping policeman is actually a sleeping policeman!
Don't get your knickers in a twist or throw a wobbly. I'm not trying to be cheeky or even twee. We could argue about 'maths', 'plasters', amongst' , 'paracetamol', 'petrol' or a bunch of other words in inverted commas, last of all, zed, for heaven sakes.
Let's forget all that and just stay mates. And by that I mean pals and not any sort of hanky-panky. Sure, we had our disagreements every now and then, and actually burning the White House was a bit beyond the pale, but we've got your backs and you've got ours. US and UK, BFF.
Of course they want to cooperate with other companies. Businesses cooperate with other businesses all the time. And assuming they have massive amounts of information on everything I do, their statements regarding their efforts to safeguard it and their blandishments regarding their obligations to my privacy is merely marketing.
Oh, like they care a fig for your profile. Through browser tracking and embedded scripts, they know your every click on the internet. Through GPS they know your every step. Through email, they know your every word. And sure, you can poison your profile. But you can't do anything about the vast, vast flood of data they have on you. And maybe, just maybe, you personally have the skill and energy to defeat them. But the vast majority of people have neither.
No doubt this comment is too late to get much attention, but I had to answer.
Here's the issue with the privacy thing.
Imagine that a corporation can track and inspect your every email, phone conversation, instant message, and footstep. They correlate it. They know who your friends are, what books you read, everything. That's an incredible amount of information. Even if you assume that the information is only going to be used for relatively harmless purposes, such as advertising. And if you think that's far-fetched, Google is trying pretty hard to get that level of knowledge of you. As are many others. And much of it is behind the scenes. Turn on Ghostery and see how many web sites pop up Google scripts. Even if you don't use any Google product, they are tracking you.
Now, imagine that they collaborate with other companies. What if they could use that knowledge of your every thought to raise prices in real time for the things you need most? Gas when you're about to run out? Use your imagination. Fair dealing is based on the notion of reasonably symmetrical information. If they other side knows everything about you, and you know nothing about them, you're at a disadvantage.
There is a legal right to privacy, which is being eroded. Check this out: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privacy_laws_of_the_United_States.
Now, imagine that an organization knows everything about you. And let's say the government decided it needs some information. So now the government knows everything about you, too. Do you completely trust the government? Are you sure they'll never make a mistake?
Now, imagine that people come to power who do not share your enlightened views on humanity. They think that there's a problem with, oh, left-handed people, people who wear socks with sandals, redheads, people born in February, people not from around here, people with certain political leanings. And let's say they get their hands on the aggregated information about you. Maybe they won't lock you up. But maybe they will. Or maybe they won't lock you up today. If you behave.
Think about all of the organizations, both real and fictional, that want unlimited knowledge of the general public. Not one of them inspires confidence. Think Big Brother. Spanish Inquisition. Total Information Awareness.
In my mind, unlimited personal knowledge aggregation leads straight to political repression. It is, in fact, evil.
Where do you work?
Phhft. And even pro photographers are struggling these days. There are legions of photographers everywhere with everything from fingernail cams to full-on bevawatt Mark XXII anvils who will take pictures of any damn thing and post it for free. Hard to make a living in that environment. Not that there isn't plenty of work for pro photographers. But for anyone thinking they're going to wander around with a camera and take a few snaps and make buckets of money, the competition from the hoards of amateurs working for fun is fierce.
Or . . . get an introductory DSLR and a great lens or two.
The Nikon D3000 DSLR with the 18-200mm zoom lens and the 35mm f/1.8 lens make a great starter set. In a few years you can upgrade the DSLR. By that time they'll have a consumer model that will take pictures in total darkness 24 hours ahead of time.
Carrying a DSLR is a decision. Once you decide you're going to carry a camera bag everywhere, it's easy. And it gives you extra room for stuff, like water bottles.
Having a camera on your phone is awesome. Carrying a DSLR is also awesome, and completely different.
They say the camera doesn't make the picture, the photographer does. That may be true, but the equipment helps.
You aren't going to get a picture like this on your phone, or with anything less than a 300mm equivalent lens. I'm not a great photographer. I think this is a pretty darn good picture. It was shot with a Nikon D90 and a 18-200 lens from quite a ways away. (I wish I knew how far. 40 yards? More? Less?) Don't know if you're going to get this from anything less than a DSLR. The DSLR doesn't matter so much. The lens does.
http://i.imgur.com/mO8da.jpg
And to parent: a tripod is great, but I almost never use them for panoramas. PhotoShop (even Elements) will stitch together just about any old thing into a great panorama. There's plenty of other panorama software, too.
Heck, two of the best passages in modern literature are the narrative of the Deliverator in the beginning of Snow Crash and the story of Lord Gy in Quicksilver.
Ha, yes. Newton, Liebnitz, William of Orange, all of that stuff. Learned it all from The Baroque Cycle. Nothing like fiction to teach you history! Oh, and we can't forget Lord Gy.
http://books.google.com/books?id=bCGd7ampITkC&pg=PT325
Now there was a language!
Turbo Pascal 4.0 was the best. Not because of efficiency, or programming paradigm, or any of that.
It had an integrated development environment that was a dream to use. The online documentation was helpful. The manual was a masterpiece. It was easy to begin with not very much and to be producing fairly complex results in not much time.
I am not a programmer by trade. Studied it in school, way back in the 20th century. Since then, every now and then I've done some programming for my own utility or for work projects in all sorts of languages, including programming, macro, and scripting languages.
Perl 5.2 was the closest I've come to a language I really like since Turbo Pascal. Yeah, the initial syntax learning curve was ferocious, but in the end it wasn't that steep. Sure, no integrated development environment, but a decent text editor was almost as good. The Perl manual pages were masterful. Again, easy to begin with not very much and produce useful results in not much time.
I'd really like to find my own personal 21st century Turbo Pascal. I don't care about the syntax, although I actually sort of liked the Pascal syntax. I want a tool that is easy to install, that includes a reasonable IDE with conveniences like syntax highlighting and code-completion, useful documentation, and a fairly rapid path from the start line to something useful. I'm willing to give up the IDE if I can get consise and precise syntax documentation and error messages.
I took a look at Perl 6. I haven't given up on it yet, but it doesn't seem cooked yet. And the documentation left me swimming in a sea of information that never seemed relevant to what i was trying to do.
I took a look at Clojure. I had a lot of hope for it. I ended up lost in a sea of irrelevancy trying to figure out how to do very basic things.
Ruby. Couldn't download it. Don't know why. Some website error over a couple of days. Fail. Maybe I'll try again some time.
Python. There is something that just seems wrong to me about indenting being syntactically significant. But what the heck, I'm willing to set that aside. The documentation isn't bad. My biggest issue with Python is "SyntaxError: bad syntax". That's it? Nearly a hundred years of computer science and the most the computer can tell me about my mistake is "SyntaxError: bad syntax"? I can't even get a "operator expected" message? Okay, so occasionally some sort of indentation error, but mostly just "bad syntax". I haven't completely given up on it, but I got tired of fighting that error message.
Actually, C# is the best I've found so far. I am really hoping for something better. But I've been able to start from not much and produce small but useful (console) programs in not much time at all. The combination of command-line compiler and my own text editor was enough to get me going. Basic language documentation is woefully deficient, but somehow that wasn't much of a problem. I've developed a love-hate relationship with Visual Studio, though. Can't seem to make it edit just one file, with full syntax and code-completion. It wants "projects" and "solutions". Screw that. I understand the usefulness of that, but if I'm writing a 30 line script that does something useful to some text data, I don't want to go through all the overhead of "projects" and "solutions", I want to create a file, edit, compile, and done. And the on-line help in VS is . . . stupid.
So, go ahead and jump on me. If any of these are your pet language, and I'm just not getting it, please enlighten me. If you have a different pet language, and I'm just not getting it, please enlighten me.
But whatever it is it needs to be pretty simple to install the basic environment. Basic documentation needs to be pretty useful. An IDE with syntax-highlighting and code-completion is a big bonus, but I can live without it if there's decent error messages and documentation. And it needs to be useful pretty
I can't find references to Scribe on Google
Did you try www.google.com/search?q=scribe+word+processing?
I was just jerking your chain. The idea that someone with "chicago" in their user name was advocating charging people not in big cities more was too irresistable to pass up. But you might be right. Maybe rurals *should* pay more for mail delivery. I'll have to think about that. Of course, I live in a big city, too. It's always easier to see the merits of one's own position when it coincidentally costs the *other* guy more.
That was too freaking funny to use my last mod point on. You're killing me here.
Hear, hear. I burn mine though. I like to get those complex poly-carbons back into the environment as soon as possible.
Why should a letter to Middle-of-Nowhere Alaska cost the same as one to New York City?
So, Atmchicago, just a wild guess, but do you happen to live in a big city?
What is new is a 2006 law requiring the USPS to bank their employees' retirement money 75 years in advance
it seems to wise to plan ahead like that
You're right.
The government should require all government agencies to plan ahead like that. What you say, Mr. Government Accountant? No government agency could begin to fund such a thing? Interesting.
No doubt the private sector has already integrated such wisdom into the economy, given that the invisible hand guarantees the greatest good for the greatest number. What you say, Mr. Private-sector Accountant? No company could begin to fund such a thing? Interesting.
No, my guy only ever kept passwords outside of the office in an encrypted file in a truecrypt partition on an air-gapped pos which also doubled as a digital picture frame as a cover story.
Don't think he ever sold any company stuff on ebay. I did see him rescue parts out of the dumpster and build systems out of them. I got my first real system that way. Of course, it's dual 40MB drives had to stand on their sides on the desk next to the system board until I bought a box for them. Ah, those were the days.
Simply saying that "There's nothing wrong with increasing profitability" as a blanket statement is hugely oversimplifying the situation.
Actually, I agree with you. I believe in as little government regulation as possible, and no less. Unbridled capitalism leads to government-sanctioned monopoly, slavery, and environmental destruction.